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Tag: garbage

  • Pastor: Jesus was born among the kind of people Donald Trump calls ‘garbage’

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    As a pastor preparing to celebrate Christmas, she can’t ignore our president’s racist lies. Because they’re blasphemy.

    As a pastor preparing to celebrate Christmas, she can’t ignore our president’s racist lies. Because they’re blasphemy.

    AFP via Getty Images

    On Dec. 2, President Donald Trump gathered his top officials at the White House for a televised Cabinet meeting during which he called the people of Somalia in general and Rep. Ilhan Omar specifically “garbage.” He warned Americans that the country “could go one way or the other, and we’re going to go the wrong way if we keep taking garbage into our country.” According to Mr. Trump, Somalis “should go back to where they came from” because they are “people who don’t work,” who “just run around killing each other,” whose “country is no good for a reason.” Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noam encouraged the president to enact “a full travel ban on every damn country that’s been flooding our nation with killers, leeches and entitlement junkies.”

    Much has happened since then. Horrific mass killings of students at Brown University and of Jewish worshipers in Bondi Beach, Australia. We’ve watched videos of the government blowing up fishing boats in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. A beloved moviemaker and his wife were murdered in their home, allegedly by their own troubled son. People are being flooded out of their homes in Washington state and, unfathomably, out of their tents in the refugee camps of Gaza. With so much violence, death and suffering, I wonder why my heart is so troubled by the racist words of our president. His remarks barely made a blip in the news cycle. The world has moved on. Even the prime minister of Somalia urged people to ignore the president’s remarks, arguing that responding to his comments gives them more prominence and noting wryly that “we are not the only country that Trump insults.”

    But as a pastor preparing to celebrate Christmas, I can’t ignore Trump’s racist lies. Because they’re blasphemy. Genesis, the first book of the Bible, tells the story of creation, which begins with the word of God. Day by cosmic day, God spoke creation into existence, calling forth light and land, oceans below and heavens above, plants and animals, until on the sixth day, God created humanity. People, we learn, are different from all that has come before, because God made them “in his own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them.” God looks with delight on all that has been made and definitively declares it not just good, but “very good.”

    Scripture teaches that all people are made in the image of God. Theologians have an ancient name for this: the “imago dei.” It means that each person is indelibly stamped with the image of the living God and so every life holds intrinsic sacred worth. When Trump calls Somalis garbage, he is calling God a creator of garbage. Trump thinks he’s insulting Somalis, and he is — but he is also insulting God, who created Somalis in God’s own image. After creating them, God blesses the newly made humans and commissions them to “be fruitful and increase in number; fill the Earth and subdue it.” Like many Americans, Trump believes that the United States is both the center and hope of the world, but Genesis teaches that God is. No place on earth is God-forsaken. No one made in the image of God is garbage.

    As Christians light Advent candles and set up nativity scenes in anticipation of Christmas, it is important to remember that the story of Jesus doesn’t begin with his birth or even the angelic revelation to his parents. The Gospel of John begins with the declaration that Jesus is the word of God through which “all things were made and without him nothing was made that has been made.” Jesus “was with God in the beginning” because he is the word spoken by God which spun creation out of chaos. On Christmas Eve, we will gather to worship and light the Christ candle and declare that in Jesus “was life and that life was the light of all humanity.”

    At Christmas, we celebrate the incarnation, the son of God being born, not among a rich, powerful and privileged people, but among the poor, powerless and dispossessed. Jesus was born in the kind of place and among the kind of people our president calls garbage. Those who call Jesus savior will never normalize or rationalize language that dehumanizes those created in his image and desecrates the world he came to save.

    Kate Murphy is pastor at The Grove Presbyterian Church in Charlotte and author of “Lost, Hidden, Small.”

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    Kate Murphy

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  • Bear, in fall feeding frenzy, follows 87-year-old California man into his home

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    Fall is the time of year when bears really begin to think with their stomachs.

    Some will double their weight to prepare for wintertime hibernation, often scavenging for calories for up to 20 hours per day. This feeding frenzy, called hyperphagia, drives them farther from their usual range and into neighborhood dumpsters in search of easy meals.

    That instinct led one hungry black bear to a South Lake Tahoe home across the Nevada border, surprising an 87-year-old man who had stepped into his garage for firewood before dawn Wednesday.

    “The man retreated back into his house, and as he did that, the bear swiped at him and scratched his hand. Then the bear followed him into the home,” said Ashley Zeme, a spokesperson for the Nevada Department of Wildlife.

    Moments later, the confused bear scratched the homeowner’s wife before bolting back outside after the couple’s granddaughter opened doors and windows to create an exit. Both residents were treated and released from the hospital with minor injuries.

    Zeme said the incident was a rare escalation but one that nonetheless illustrated how fall hyperphagia reshapes bear behavior in the region.

    “During hyperphagia, a bear entering a home would be more likely,” she said, noting that bears are seeking a staggering 20,000 to 25,000 calories a day as winter approaches. “Out in the wild, they’re trying to build up their calories through berries and insects. But when they come across garbage in a neighborhood, that’s all the calories they need in one spot.”

    The best way to prevent bear encounters, she said, is by securing garbage and removing attractants such as bird feeders, pet food, coolers and barbecue grills.

    Hyperphagia typically runs from August through November. During this period, bears dramatically expand their search radius, often pushing deeper into residential areas. Once a bear finds an easy reward, it tends to return and becomes progressively bolder, according to wildlife officials. In the Tahoe Basin, where bears have long learned that residents and vacationers bring dense, reliable calories, hyperphagia coincides with a surge in reports of trash raids, break-ins and, more infrequently, incidents like the one that occurred Wednesday.

    “Once they get a food reward every time they go into a neighborhood, they’ll keep coming back for more,” Zeme said. “They have good memories and they’re smart.”

    Zeme emphasized that the bear in this case appeared confused and startled, not predatory.

    “This isn’t usual territory for a bear,” she said. “They’re not used to being in homes or garages. The bear was probably confused, spooked. Who knows what it was. But this wasn’t normal.”

    Wildlife officials said roughly 90% of bear-related incidents originate with unsecured garbage, which is why it’s recommended that residents in bear-prone areas lock up trash and food in wildlife-resistant containers and avoid leaving bags outside. They also advise that locals keep vehicles free of food, lock doors and windows, and use electric fencing to protect beehives and chicken coops.

    “We always see more bear activity this time of year,” Zeme said. “Securing attractants is the best way to keep them away.”

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    Gavin J. Quinton

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  • California regulators approve rules to curb methane leaks and prevent fires at landfills

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    In one of the most important state environmental decisions this year, California air regulators adopted new rules designed to reduce methane leaks and better respond to disastrous underground fires at landfills statewide.

    California Air Resources Board members voted 12-0 on Thursday to approve a batch of new regulations for the state’s nearly 200 large landfills, designed to minimize the release of methane, a powerful greenhouse gas produced by decomposing organic waste. Landfills are California’s second-largest source of methane emissions, following only the state’s large dairy cow and livestock herds.

    The new requirements will force landfill operators to install additional pollution controls; more comprehensively investigate methane leaks on parts of landfills that are inaccessible with on-the-ground monitoring using new technology like drones and satellites; and fix equipment breakdowns much faster. Landfill operators also will be required to repair leaks identified through California’s new satellite-detection program.

    The regulation is expected to prevent the release of 17,000 metric tons of methane annually — an amount capable of warming the atmosphere as much as 110,000 gas-fired cars driven for a year.

    It also will curtail other harmful landfill pollution, such as lung-aggravating sulfur and cancer-causing benzene. Landfill operators will be required to keep better track of high temperatures and take steps to minimize the fire risks that heat could create.

    There are underground fires burning in at least two landfills in Southern California — smoldering chemical reactions that are incinerating buried garbage, releasing toxic fumes and spewing liquid waste. Regulators found explosive levels of methane emanating from many other landfills across the state.

    During the three-hour Air Resources Board hearing preceding the vote, several Californians who live near Chiquita Canyon Landfill — one of the known sites where garbage is burning deep underground — implored the board to act to prevent disasters in other communities across the state.

    “If these rules were already updated, maybe my family wouldn’t be sick,” said Steven Howse, a 27-year resident of Val Verde. “My house wouldn’t be for sale. My close friend and neighbor would still live next door to me. And I wouldn’t be pleading with you right now. You have the power to change this.”

    Landfill operators, including companies and local governments, voiced their concern about the costs and labor needed to comply with the regulation.

    “We want to make sure that the rule is implementable for our communities, not unnecessarily burdensome,” said John Kennedy, a senior policy advocate for Rural County Representatives of California, a nonprofit organization representing 40 of the state’s 58 counties, many of which own and operate landfills. “While we support the overarching goals of the rule, we remain deeply concerned about specific measures including in the regulation.”

    Lauren Sanchez, who was appointed chair of the California Air Resources Board in October, recently attended the United Nations’ COP30 climate conference in Brazil with Gov. Gavin Newsom. What she learned at the summit, she said, made clear to her that California’s methane emissions have international consequences, and that the state has an imperative to reduce them.

    “The science is clear, acting now to reduce emissions of methane and other short-lived climate pollutants is the best way to immediately slow the pace of climate change,” Sanchez said.

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    Tony Briscoe

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  • Jennifer Lawrence Tells INSANE Story About Time She Fed A Very ‘Hungry’ Robert Pattinson Food Out Of Her Trash! – Perez Hilton

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    Jennifer Lawrence is reflecting on a time she did Robert Pattinson SO dirty.

    The Oscar winner appeared on The Graham Norton Show on Friday and told an INSANE story about her Die My Love co-star:

    “I had my girlfriends over. We were in our pajamas. We were watching Little Women. It was December … And he was like, ‘Hey, I just wrapped something like a block away from you.’ I was like, ‘Oh my god!’ because Rob is one of the girls. Like, he wants to gossip, he is just one of the gals. And so I was like, ‘Come over!’”

     

    Hilariously, J.Law noted the Twilight star manifests a certain “maternal” instinct in her because of his tendency to neglect self-care:

    “He’s also like my daughter — he’s a great father, he’s a professional, he shows up on time, but I wouldn’t trust that he would put a coat on … He’s not going to eat on time. He brings out a very maternal [side].”

    She continued:

    “So he comes in and I give him a hug, and he’s like, ‘Do you have any food? I’m so hungry.’ And I’m like, ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah, come in, come in.’ And then he goes to the bathroom, and I do have food, but it’s in the trash.”

    Too bad, right? No… Jennifer went dumpster diving to fish it out! She continued:

    “And so while he was in the bathroom, I was just, like, pulling food out of my garbage can.”

    The No Hard Feelings star said her friends were shocked by her questionable actions, but that she continued nonetheless… We hope they had JUST tossed their leftovers out! Hopefully still contained in takeout boxes or something!

    The Silver Linings Playbook actress recalled The Batman star coming out of the bathroom and chowing down no questions asked:

    “And then, so, he eats it and we’re all just, like, watching him eat this trash. And then when he was finished, he was like, ‘I’m still hungry, is there more?’ And I’m like, ‘Well there is, but it’s in the garbage.’”

    Any thoughts on what happened next? Rob scoffed in disgust?? Questioned if the food he had already been eating was from the garbage? NOPE. Jennifer continued:

    “He’s like, ‘Oh, I don’t mind.’ And he just pulled it out of the trash and just kept eating it.”

    OMFG!

    Norton joked he “sounds like the ideal house guest.” Ha! Watch her tell the story (below):

    Well, be warned if you’re ever at J.Law’s house and she serves you food, it might be from the trash!

    Reactions, Perezcious readers?? Would YOU eat Jennifer Lawrence’s garbage?! Let us know in the comments down below!

    [Images via BBC & GQ/YouTube]

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    Perez Hilton

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  • Garbage kicked off farewell tour in Orlando with renewed fire

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    Alt-rock legends Garbage kicked off their U.S. tour here in Orlando this week, which was great news! Not-so-great news: This is, in the band’s word, their final headlining U.S. tour. Garbage frontperson Shirley Manson laid it all on the line from the stage.

    “We as a band have just decided that things are getting stickier and stickier for us to go out and do a long-ass tour, it just feels like, it’s difficult, and the forces of the world, basically it’s just really difficult for bands. Due to streaming and all that, it’s really fucked with the economics of the music industry, and it makes touring very difficult. And we are old, we are angry and tired.”

    That business out of the way, the band played a set brimming with ferocity and energy that would put much-younger groups to shame. The setlist was a dizzying dive through the 1990s rockers’ full discography, including “Not My Idea,” “Hold,” “Parade,” “How I Met God” and “Only Happy When It Rains.”

    And hopefully you got there early enough to see young rockers Starcrawler, who really tore the house down.

    Starcrawler at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Starcrawler at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Starcrawler at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Starcrawler at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Starcrawler at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Starcrawler at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Starcrawler at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Starcrawler at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Starcrawler at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Starcrawler at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Starcrawler at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Starcrawler at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Starcrawler at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman
    Garbage at Hard Rock Live Credit: by Jim Leatherman


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    Jim Leatherman and Matthew Moyer
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  • Dumpster Diver Makes $5,000 a Month Discovering Designer Items | Entrepreneur

    Dumpster Diver Makes $5,000 a Month Discovering Designer Items | Entrepreneur

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    Veronica Taylor has made a career out of the saying, One person’s trash is another person’s treasure.

    The 32-year-old Pennsylvania native travels the country sifting through dumpsters to find designer items she can resell on the online auction app, WhatNot.

    “It’s fantastic. It’s really like a real-life treasure hunt,” Taylor told The Daily Mail. “You’ve no idea what you’re going to find. And I can hang out with my best friend and make a living from finding things.”

    Taylor is part of a growing movement of so-called Dumpster Divers who go through dumpsters and garbage cans to find items that are still usable. Some dumpster dive to reduce waste, some to shame companies into practicing more sustainable product disposal, and others do it for money.

    What started as a lucrative and exciting side hustle for Taylor became her full-time job. She told The Daily Mail that she makes up to $5,000 monthly, reselling items like Louis Vuitton Wallets and Michael Kors shoes.

    But Taylor also donates unused food and hygiene products to charities and the homeless.

    Dumpster Diving on TikTok

    Last year, dumpster diving became a trend on TikTok, with many videos of people showing off their finds and sharing tips on how to do it safely and effectively. Others have used the trend to shine the spotlight on companies thought to be wasteful.

    For example, Tiffany Sheree (aka Dumpster Diving Mama) posted a video of trashed purses and bags outside a Coach store thought to be destroyed by employees. The video went viral, causing Coach to say it would stop destroying and dumping unsold bags. “I love that I’m making a change,” Sheree said on the Fuse-TV show Upcyle Nation.

    Veronica Taylor does not have a TikTok channel, but a short documentary of her exploits appears on The Daily Mail’s website.

    “It really is like being on vacation all the time. The typical places that we do really well at we go every single night – 10pm to 3am usually,” Taylor said. “Then other days, we go to rich people neighborhoods. It’s fantastic.”

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    Jonathan Small

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